भूतान्भव्यांश्च मनुजांस् तारयेद्द्रुमसंमितान् परमां सिद्धिमाप्नोति पुनरावृत्तिदुर्लभाम् //
bhūtānbhavyāṃśca manujāṃs tārayeddrumasaṃmitān paramāṃ siddhimāpnoti punarāvṛttidurlabhām //
மரங்களின் எண்ணிக்கையளவு—கடந்ததும் வருங்காலமும்—மனிதர்களை கரை சேர்க்க உதவுகிறவன், மீண்டும் திரும்பும் சுழற்சிக்குப் பின் பெற அரிய பரம சித்தியை அடைவான்.
It frames Pralaya-era teaching as a liberation doctrine: the highest fruit is not merely survival through dissolution, but attaining a state beyond punarāvṛtti (return/rebirth) through compassionate deliverance of others.
It elevates social protection into a soteriological duty: a ruler or householder who ‘causes many to cross over’—by protection, charity, guidance, or rescue—earns supreme merit culminating in rare spiritual perfection.
No direct Vastu/temple rule appears; the operative ritual idea is “tāraṇa” (deliverance), a merit-bearing act often linked in Purāṇic ethics with dāna, protection, and guidance rather than construction.